Hullo! I'm Sadie, founder of Bread SRSLY, San Francisco's first gluten-free sourdough bread company. The company began late in 2011 after a furious bout of gluten-free sourdough experiments in my home kitchen in Cole Valley. But the story starts well before that. Let's go back a ways.

I've always worked with my hands, and in college I joined a team of students who were designing a massive Rube Goldberg machine - you know, the funny chain reactions that start with a cat pouncing on a mouse and end with a robot serving you toast. I was completely smitten with one of the project leaders, Jesse, who soon graduated and moved home to San Francisco.

In 2009 I took some permanent time off, followed Jesse to San Francisco, and hoped to win his heart.

Unfortunately, the feeling was not mutual. But if college taught me anything, it was that if you bake it, they will come. I knew Jesse had just gone gluten-free, and I got to work experimenting with new ingredients - sorghum flour, sweet rice, buckwheat. Many of my attempts ended up in the compost, but when one came out well, I would ask Jesse to come try it. Luckily for me I developed a good understanding of gluten-free ingredients, because a few months later I learned that I was pretty seriously gluten-intolerant myself!

I redoubled my efforts in the kitchen, focusing on making the perfect loaf of gluten-free bread. And here we arrive, with a handful of bread recipes, at the very first bread day in August 2011. Friends came over in the evening to pick up their purchases, and to sweeten the deal, I began to deliver loaves on my bicycle. A few months later I was biking late into the night delivering orders.

Word spread. Friends told friends, who told colleagues, who told neighborhood groups, who told reporters, and on March 13th, 2012, a writeup in Daily Candy SF catapulted Bread SRSLY into a full-time business. With tons of help from some amazing friends, I began to send 40, 60, 80 loaves out into the world, all delivered by ladies on bikes. Most weeks I biked 100 miles to get bread to its many destinations. And Jesse? Eventually my baking paid off, he helped me build my own cargo bike to cart my larger orders around town, and we've been together ever since.